Organ Transplant
Research projects
Content with Investigacion .
- Titulo: “Inmunidad entrenada en trasplante de órganos”.
Entidad financiadora. Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades
Referencia: Proyecto PID2019-110015RB-I00 financiado por MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033
IP: Jordi Cano Ochando
Fechas de ejecución: 01/06/2020-31/05/2024
Presupuesto: 205.700 €
Publications
Programa de Legionelosis. En Echevarría Mayo JE y Oteo Iglesias J (Editores) Programas de Vigilancia Microbiológica Centro Nacional de Microbiología.
Fernando González-Camacho y Almudena Cascajero. Programa de Legionelosis. En Echevarría Mayo JE y Oteo Iglesias J (Editores) Programas de Vigilancia Microbiológica Centro Nacional de Microbiología. Volumen 2:77-89. 2021-2022 Majadahonda (Madrid); Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Centro Nacional de Microbiología: 2023.
Chikungunya virus infections among travellers returning to Spain, 2008 to 2014
3. Maria Dolores Fernandez Garcia; Mathieu Bangert; Fernando de Ory; Arantxa Potente; Lourdes Hernandez; Fatima Lasala; Laura Herrero; Francisca Molero; Anabel Negredo; Ana Vázquez; Teodora Minguito; Pilar Balfagón; Jesus de la Fuente; Sabino Puente; Eva Ramírez de Arellano; Mar Lago; Miguel Martinez; Joaquim Gascón; Francesca Norman; Rogelio Lopez Velez; Elena Sulleiro; Diana Pou; Nuria Serre; Ricardo Fernández Roblas; Antonio Tenorio; Leticia Franco; Maria Paz Sanchez Seco. Chikungunya virus infections among travellers returning to Spain, 2008 to 2014. Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin. 21 - 36, (Sweden): 08/09/2016. ISSN 1560-7917
PUBMED DOILegionella feeleii: Ubiquitous Pathogen in the Environment and Causative Agent of Pneumonia
Vaccaro L, Gomes TS, Izquierdo F, Magnet A, Llorens Berzosa S, Ollero D, Salso S, Alhambra A, Gómez C, López Cano M, Pelaz C, Bellido Samaniego B, Del Aguila C, Fenoy S, Hurtado-Marcos C. Front Microbiol. 2021;12:707187.
DOIImmunogenicity of a third dose with mRNA-vaccines in the ChAdOx1-S/BNT162b2 vaccination regimen against SARS-CoV-2 variants.
García-Pérez J, Borobia AM, Pérez-Olmeda M, Portolés A, Castaño L, Campins-Artí M, Bertrán MJ, Bermejo M, Arribas JR, López A, Ascaso-Del-Rio A, Arana-Arri E, Fuentes Camps I, Vilella A, Cascajero A, García-Morales MT, Castillo de la Osa M, Pérez Ingidua C, Lora D, Jiménez-Santana P, Pino-Rosa S, Gómez de la Cámara A, De La Torre-Tarazona E, Calonge E, Cruces R, Belda-Iniesta C, Alcamí J, Frías J, Carcas AJ, Díez-Fuertes F. iScience. 2024; 27(9):110728
PUBMED DOILonger intervals between SARS-CoV-2 infection and mRNA-1273 doses improve the neutralization of different variants of concern
García-Pérez J, Bermejo M, Ramírez-García A, De La Torre-Tarazona HE, Cascajero A, Castillo de la Osa M, Jiménez P, Aparicio Gómez M, Calonge E, Sancho-López A, Payares-Herrera C, Layunta Acero R, Vicente-Izquierdo L, Avendaño-Solá C, Alcamí J, Pérez-Olmeda M, Díez-Fuertes F. J Med Virol. 2023; 95(3):e28679
PUBMED DOIImmune response and reactogenicity after immunization with two-doses of an experimental COVID-19 vaccine (CVnCOV) followed by a third-fourth shot with a standard mRNA vaccine (BNT162b2): RescueVacs multicenter cohort study
Ascaso-Del-Rio A, García-Pérez J, Pérez-Olmeda M, Arana-Arri E, Vergara I, Pérez-Ingidua C, Bermejo M, Castillo de la Osa M, Imaz-Ayo N, Riaño Fernández I, Astasio González O, Díez-Fuertes F, Meijide S, Arrizabalaga J, Hernández Gutiérrez L, de la Torre-Tarazona HE, Mariano Lázaro A, Vargas-Castrillón E, Alcamí J, Portolés A; RescueVac study Group. EClinicalMedicine. 2022; 51:101542
PUBMED DOIAdditional Information
Induction of allograft tolerance remains a goal to be achieved in organ transplantation. Most therapeutic strategies focus on inhibition of the adaptive immune system, but recent data demonstrate that allogeneic recognition of myeloid cells initiates transplant rejection. Therapies targeting myeloid cells “in vivo” represent a potential target to induce immunological tolerance, but remain clinically unexplored.
Our laboratory uses a revolutionary nanoimmunotherapy of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) nanoparticles loaded with rapamycin (mTORi-HDL) that prevents epigenetic modifications associated with trained immunity, a recently discovered functional state of macrophages. Using an experimental mouse transplant model, our results demonstrate that the administration of this immunotherapy with mTORi-HDL prevents the immune response and promotes tolerance to the transplanted organ.
Our laboratory shows a multidisciplinary research approach articulated in three different objectives to evaluate the clinical relevance and therapeutic effects of immunotherapy in preparation for a clinical trial in organ transplantation. The general objectives will be aimed at confirming the identification of trained immunity as a biomarker and analytical value to predict the risk of rejection in transplant patients under three conditions: prolonged periods of ischemic reperfusion (IRI) (objective 1), allosensitization (objective 2) and infection (objective 3).
Induction of allograft tolerance remains a goal to be achieved in organ transplantation. Most therapeutic strategies focus on inhibition of the adaptive immune system, but recent data demonstrate that allogeneic recognition of myeloid cells initiates transplant rejection. Therapies targeting myeloid cells “in vivo” represent a potential target to induce immunological tolerance, but remain clinically unexplored.
Our laboratory uses a revolutionary nanoimmunotherapy of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) nanoparticles loaded with rapamycin (mTORi-HDL) that prevents epigenetic modifications associated with trained immunity, a recently discovered functional state of macrophages. Using an experimental mouse transplant model, our results demonstrate that the administration of this immunotherapy with mTORi-HDL prevents the immune response and promotes tolerance to the transplanted organ.
Our laboratory shows a multidisciplinary research approach articulated in three different objectives to evaluate the clinical relevance and therapeutic effects of immunotherapy in preparation for a clinical trial in organ transplantation. The general objectives will be aimed at confirming the identification of trained immunity as a biomarker and analytical value to predict the risk of rejection in transplant patients under three conditions: prolonged periods of ischemic reperfusion (IRI) (objective 1), allosensitization (objective 2) and infection (objective 3).